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In 1970-71, Notre Dame-LSU met for the first time November 21, 1970

Posted on 12/25/17 at 7:38 am
Posted by Old
Metairie
Member since Dec 2016
2843 posts
Posted on 12/25/17 at 7:38 am
Notre Dame vs LSU: The History
quote:

In 1970-71, Notre Dame-LSU met for the first time with Irish All-Americans such as Clarence Ellis (23), Walt Patulski (85), Mike Kadish (72) and Thom Gatewood (44), while LSU featured Tommy Casanova (37).
In the Dec. 30 Music City Bowl at Nashville, LSU will attempt to become the third team to post a winning record against the Irish in at least 10 meetings. The current series is tied at 5-5.
The first encounter occurred in 1970, and it also happened to be Notre Dame’s maiden voyage against a team from the Southeastern Conference, which didn’t even begin integration of black players until then. Of the 10 meetings, we rate that one as the best in the series for Notre Dame.
Here is our 1-10 countdown:
1. Nov. 21, 1970: Notre Dame 3, LSU 0 One of the more underrated great games in Notre Dame Stadium annals, a slugfest won by the No. 2 Irish over No. 7 LSU, thereby earning the Irish a shot to play No. 1 Texas in the Cotton Bowl. Scott Hempel’s 24-yard field goal with 2:54 left in the contest was the difference.
Especially amazing is that the two quarterbacks were future NFL stars and Pro Bowl picks Joe Theismann and Bert Jones. Notre Dame defensive end Walt Patulski was credited with eight tackles behind the line of scrimmage for minus-42 yards.
LSU got a form of “revenge” on New Year’s Day. Although 9-1 Notre Dame (which lost to USC in the regular season finale) upset No. 1 Texas, it needed the Tigers to defeat Nebraska in the Orange Bowl to win the national title. The Cornhuskers scored late to win 17-12, leaving the Irish No. 2.
This post was edited on 12/25/17 at 7:41 am
Posted by Old
Metairie
Member since Dec 2016
2843 posts
Posted on 12/25/17 at 7:44 am to
College football: No. 14 Notre Dame eager for bowl win vs. LSU to gain momentum
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly is pleased with how his team is preparing for its Citrus Bowl clash with No. 16 LSU.
There are some other concerns for the 14th-ranked Fighting Irish.
When it comes to practice, Kelly said he has been thrilled so far with how Notre Dame has responded to dropping two of its last three games. Attitude and aptitude had slipped, and Kelly said his players "looked like they were in biology class" as he tried to motivate them in the days before a 38-20 loss to Stanford on Nov. 25.
"There was no juice," Kelly recalled, "there was no excitement."
But at least through the campus bowl workouts before a four-day Christmas break, Kelly said the "quickness and crispness" had returned.
"You can see the sense of urgency that they are starting to practice with," he said, "a physicalness that we're looking for was quite apparent."
Posted by jeffsdad
Member since Mar 2007
22020 posts
Posted on 12/25/17 at 8:05 am to
good stuff
Posted by Malaysian Tiger
Manila
Member since May 2008
4732 posts
Posted on 12/25/17 at 6:09 pm to
I was in the Navy at Norfolk and remember watching on TV. I do not remember but I think it came through ND and the Military.
Posted by msbargas
Ponte vedra beach FL
Member since Sep 2009
727 posts
Posted on 12/25/17 at 6:38 pm to
I believe ND had the number 1 offense that year, averaging well over 500 yards/game and LSU shut them down
LINK
Posted by LSUPsych-ops
Metairie
Member since Jan 2013
50 posts
Posted on 12/25/17 at 10:02 pm to
Was at the initial LSU-Notre Dame meeting. Came down from Chicago where in the sports pages of the local newspaper (the Chicage Tribune, I believe) the build up to the game all week was a clash of an unstoppable force (ND) versus an immovable object (LSU). The game lived up to the hype and should have ended 0-0 without a referee making a very questionable call that eventually allowed ND to kick the winning field goal.

Saw them play again the next year in Baton Rouge where LSU won 28-7, with a stellar performace by the defense and especially the play of Ronnie Estay (if my memory is serving me correctly.)
Posted by Mike da Tigah
Bravo Romeo Lima Alpha
Member since Feb 2005
59682 posts
Posted on 12/26/17 at 12:47 pm to
It actually goes back to 1969 when Notre Dame finally decided that it would participate in bowls and LSU got stuck waving in the wind after a 9-1 season.
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